Lakewood, NJ – Jewish Community Insists Anti-Semite Behind Posts Derogatory Against Orthodox Jewish Who Move To NJ

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    An Orthodox woman pushes a stroller in Lakewood, N.J. in 2013. The population in the largely haredi Orthodox town has boomed in the past couple of decades, and haredi families are looking to move to neighboring towns. (Dennis Fraevich/Flickr)

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    Lakewood, NJ – The video, with suspenseful music playing in the background, opens with footage of a crowd of Orthodox Jews. Then it paraphrases a classic poem about the Holocaust.

    “First they came for my house, but I did not speak up,” the narrator says. “I said I am not willing to sell, and closed my door. … Then they came for my forests, but I did not speak up, because I thought I had no vested interests in the forests.”

    The script is a riff on the Martin Niemoller work lamenting the perils of inaction in the face of Nazi atrocities.

    But the video, which was posted this month, isn’t meant to denounce Nazis. Instead its purported villains are Orthodox Jews looking to move to the Central New Jersey suburbs.

    “The process by which Lakewood was lost was a simple one and has been seen in other parts of the Northeast over the last few years,” the description below the video says, referring to a nearby city with a large haredi Orthodox community and rapid population growth. “Offer generous amounts of money to acquire existing homes through pressure sales, build new homes at the expense of the environment, elect a majority to governing bodies and sieze [sic] control.”

    The group behind the video is Rise Up Ocean County, which aims to galvanize residents of Central Jersey to stop haredi Orthodox families from buying real estate in the towns surrounding Lakewood. It says it is producing a documentary and mobilizes locals to attend town meetings. Rise Up Ocean County, whose leaders are anonymous, wrote in an October statement that it does not want the quiet, comfortable suburbs to go the way of Lakewood.

    Lakewood, which is known as a center of haredi Orthodox life in the United States, has seen its population boom in recent decades, from around 60,000 in 2000 to more than 100,000 as of 2017. Local officials have predicted that by 2030, the number would more than double, according to the Asbury Park Press.

    As the city has grown, Orthodox families seeking more space have moved to neighboring towns like Toms River or Jackson.

    The expansion has created a backlash from some non-Orthodox neighbors, who often say their objections are about zoning, housing density and local support for public schools. But the Orthodox residents and others see some of the criticism as anti-Semitic.

    A similar dynamic is being seen by towns near Monsey, a largely haredi Orthodox town in New York state near its border with New Jersey. Those towns repeatedly attempted to stop the construction of an eruv, a symbolic ritual boundary that residents said would invite more Orthodox Jews to move in.

    Rise Up Ocean County insists its objections are only about “quality of life,” not religion.

    “We also acknowledge that corruption of our political system has allowed development in Lakewood at an unprecedented rate and frankly in an unsafe manner,” the group’s statement said. “What has occurred is tragic, we exist to insure that what has happened there cannot happen elsewhere in Ocean County. We already see signs in the northern part of Toms River, southern part of Howell, eastern part of Jackson and western part of Brick … and beyond. IT MUST STOP!”

    Local Jewish leaders in and around Lakewood acknowledge that the population spike has posed challenges, like clogged streets and scarce parking. In addition, the local school district runs large deficits because it receives funding only for the 6,000 kids who attend public school, but must provide buses for the additional 30,000 who attend private schools.

    Nevertheless, the Jewish leaders call Rise Up Ocean County’s rhetoric anti-Semitic.

    “It’s a vicious group that’s trying very hard to put a genteel veneer on their deeply anti-Semitic agenda,” said Rabbi Moshe Zev Weisberg, a spokesman for the Lakewood Vaad, a local Jewish communal organization. “Using the most vile anti-Semitic methods reminds us of a very dark period of Jewish history.”

    In anonymous emails, Rise Up Ocean County agreed to answer written questions from JTA but later reneged, pointing to statements written on its Facebook page.

    On that page, the group repeatedly denies that it is anti-Semitic (“We are NOT anti-Semitic,” the October statement reads). And in a post written following the video paraphrasing the Holocaust poem, the group wrote that “We certainly did not intend to draw a moral equivalency between the holocaust and current events in Ocean County. What took place under Nazi rule will forever be known as the greatest human tragedy in the history of mankind …” The video, however, is still up.

    Instead, the organization claims that it is concerned about what happens when any one ethnic group exercises too much power.

    “Whenever a particular group, whether they are orthodox Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Atheist, black, hispanic, or white exercises complete control over any one element of government it is a danger,” the group wrote in a post Wednesday. “Human nature is for that group to advance their own agenda, often times at the expense of the populace.”

    Weisberg and others have said that the way the group singles out haredi Jews and generalizes about them is hateful. Another video, posted to Rise Up Ocean County’s YouTube channel, shows a photo of an unidentified group of Orthodox Jewish men with the subtitle “It’s not about religion.” The video then shows an extended shot of unidentified Orthodox children before warning that population trends could destroy the area’s “quality of life.”

    “That growth will not be in the black or Hispanic communities, it will be almost exclusively in the Orthodox Jewish community,” the narrator says, later adding that “Lakewood will be at the epicenter of the continued wonderful quality of life that we currently enjoy in Ocean County, or it will lead to its utter destruction.”

    Comments on the group’s Facebook page are cruder. On one post showing a photo of a local Orthodox real estate agent, one commenter wrote, “They already own so much property over there! I don’t understand where the money comes from if more than half are on welfare?!!! (I do understand, believe me).” Another wrote “build the wall around Lakewood,” which garnered 11 “likes.” A third wrote “Unbelievable. These animals.”

    Drew Staffenberg, the executive director of the local Jewish federation, said that communal leaders have been in touch with law enforcement regarding the group. The Rise Up Ocean County group has more than 4,000 likes, and Staffenberg says it represents a fringe of the local population, which is generally open and accepting.

    “I think his rhetoric spews hate,” Staffenberg said, referring to the anonymous administrator of the Facebook group. “It’s anti-Semitic. I don’t think there’s a question about that. The law enforcement are monitoring this. It’s really one guy and a few other people trying to stir up trouble.”

    The real estate agent criticized in the Facebook group, Abba Deutsch, said the Facebook page does not reflect his day-to-day interactions with residents of Toms River, where he lives and works. He said he never hears anti-Semitic comments while soliciting properties and has good relations with his neighbors regardless of religion.

    Deutsch said that he, like other haredi residents of the city, was drawn by its quiet streets and relatively spacious homes, compared to Lakewood.

    “The majority of the people in Toms River are very welcoming and very nice,” he said. “It’s just a couple of clowns who go on Facebook and make noise.”

    Deutsch said that most people moving to Toms River don’t want to live in Brooklyn, in high-density housing or in Lakewood.

    “They want nice, proper houses,” he said. “They want to live the American dream like the rest of Americans.”


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    22 Comments
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    ralph1527
    ralph1527
    5 years ago

    Just 3 questions for the Rise Up Ocean County organization…. Why don’t they complain when the Jews pay them triple and then some for their property ? Why don’t the business’ like Shoprite , Costco ,and the like , criticize the Jews for all the money they made from Jewish patronage ? Why don’t they complain about the most trouble they have from their Jewish neighbors…. perhaps a parking ticket ???!!!!!

    MyThreeCents
    MyThreeCents
    5 years ago

    Why don’t the Chareidim register their 30,000 children in public school just to make a point?

    5 years ago

    It’s really simple the white non Jewish (or non Mormon) are not procreating. Their neighborhoods will have less buyers so in comes a group that needs housing due to their exponential growth. It’s happening throughout New Jersey and the US where once white neighborhoods are being bought up by Muslims, Bangledeshi, Asian groups etc. It’s just that the world hates Jews and we are really politically savvy and understand how community boards etc can work to our advantage. Like Rabbi Miller ztzl used to say antisemitism is really a gift otherwise we’d really be swallowed up due to intermarriage.

    HeshyEmes
    Active Member
    HeshyEmes
    5 years ago

    It’s not antisemitic, right; just “quality of life” issues. So let’s replace Lakewood, Toms River, and Jackson NJ with Brownsville, Bedford Stuyvesant in Brooklyn; and Newark in NJ. :And replace Orthodox Jews with Blacks. So what do you think would happen if there was Facebook Pages and other social media
    decrying the change of life with increased crime, Rowdy and rambunctious children and teens wreaking havoc. We have to stop the Blacks from destroying communities 1 at time, and “changing the character” of these formerly pleasant neighborhoods. How long would the objectors and activists have their freedom to voice their 1st Amendment rights while being alive, and not hospitalizated nor in prison.

    5 years ago

    I live in a Lakewood neighborhood that was predominantly non-Jewish until about 7 years ago. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been thanked by long times residents for “moving in to the neighborhood”. They love the fact there are no loud parties, drugs & crime in their neighborhood anymore.

    misslydia128
    misslydia128
    5 years ago

    Do you really think that would be advantageous to the frum community ? The reason I’m isn’t done is because of the well founded fear that the kids would like public school better , and refuse to go back to yeshiva .

    ayinglefunadorf
    ayinglefunadorf
    5 years ago

    Let them call Trump and get rid of the illegal Latinos and the Yeshivah Crowd will leave too. They cant live without the illegals do their work.

    ohvei
    ohvei
    5 years ago

    As a Ocean county resident I would put my two cents here,
    Ocean county population are a majority of white Christian republicans (and some conservative Jews) they look on every minority as strangers, the blacks,Asians, Spanish all feel uncomfortable here.
    I could feel a huge difference going to a Mall in ocean county and a Mall a few miles higher.
    But let’s not fool ourselves,
    We’re all sitting in traffic on the Rt, 9 , clover RD, prospect , and the list goes on.
    We all drove by areas like Ridge with extremely narrow streets and hundreds of houses overlybuilded without leaving an inch of landed.
    And at the same time that people are suffering from traffic , and Accidents,
    The township kept on approving hundreds of houses In that same areas (like oak and vine on the Rt 9 another 1k residents, on clover they aprroved another 50 units and the list goes on and on )
    Where is the אחריות on people’s time sitting in traffic , on the amount of accidents happening in Lakewood ?
    Yes are neighbors are angry and I understand them.
    Lakewood township should be not driven by the money hungry developers and real estate firms, and we all know who is in the zoning board and who gets elected.
    I am sure some people saw In the news the fight about the Gulf course on the 55 plus community,
    This a typical example of ruthless money hungry developers not being sensitive to out neighbors,
    Who would have the heart to take away a beautiful gulf course from hundres of seniors who bought there house to retire in a beautiful place.
    Yes we have to build normal and safe, before we approve a development we have to call safety experts and traffic experts and design experts , to see if the development works for the area.
    The zoning board should be older, level headed people, they should have a deep understanding and אחריות before they add another building in this Town.
    The Vaad,the zoning board, the administration all have to go,
    They failed us the people,
    We don’t need a vaad to sing the song of
    We are good, we need a vaad who is actually addressing the problems.

    5 years ago

    somehow the ultra orthodox Jewish lifestyle, living very close to each other – late hours etc, is more apt for city life.

    triumphinwhitehouse
    triumphinwhitehouse
    5 years ago

    I have been to Lakewood unfortunately numerous times, in short it is a disaster,. way overbuilt, too much traffic, too spread out, cul de sac’s galore. I do NOT blame the Goyim and those off the derech for not wanting this repeated in TR, they are NOT Anti semites. plus the frum have rented to illegal Mexicans and other latino riff raff and that has destroyed the public schools and led to complete disregard to noise and parties galore. latinos love loud drunken parties. in short they don’t want Lakewood coming to them just like folks in Pomona don’t want the destroyed tranqulity of monsey coming to them.

    ssteinberg
    ssteinberg
    5 years ago

    Crying antisemitism is not appropriate and quite frankly offensive. Deal with the issues. People are seeing their neighborhoods change, and they don’t like it, and they have a right not to like the changes. Deal with people in a Menchlach way. The Lakewood community needs a liaison between the two (or three) communities. A person who is educated and articulate,who is willing to look at all issues and try to resolve the fears and accusations of everyone. This is not the first time we hear that homeowners are being pressured, and yes, threatened to sell their homes- are cars being double and triple parked on the streets (think Boro Park).
    I grew up on a street in Boro Park in the 1960’s, we were Jewish, Italian and Irish immigrants. EVERYONE got along, we cared and respected each other-and we showed it by how we treated one another. People of good will never get it wrong.

    5 years ago

    I live in a relatively conservative community in the Midwest. The goyim around here were less than thrilled when a large Orthodox Shul was built in a certain area, which for all practical purposes had been judenrein. There was a strong undercurrent of anti-semitism, when the Yidden had to go to City Hall, to attend a hearing to request permits for construction. One goy had the nerve to state, “Why don’t you Jews build your Synagogue elsewhere”. He was referring to a blue collar area, where no Jews live. Also, there were secular Jews who were against the Orthodox Shul being built, with all sorts of b.s. excuses, even though Jews had lived in that particular municipality for over 50 years. In short, the goyim were not used to seeing frum Jews walking to Shul with Kippahs. In other words, once someone becomes “too Jewish” for the goyim, then they feel threatened. They don’t have to be Hareidi or Chassidic, to get the goyim riled up. Unfortunately, many goyim are just plain farbisen, as it is in their DNA. Once they hit the bottle, all of the pent up vile statements about Jews flow from their mouths, like a river flowing downstream. It is impossible to be friends with any of them.